Published: December 18, 2015
Citation: Computer (IEEE Computer) vol. 48, no. 12, (December 2015) pp. 80-87
Author(s)
Jeffrey Voas, George Hurlburt
Integrating software developed by third-party organizations into a larger system raises concerns about the software's quality, origin, functionality, security, and interoperability. Addressing these concerns requires rethinking the roles of software's principal supply-chain actors--vendor, assessor, and evaluator.
Integrating software developed by third-party organizations into a larger system raises concerns about the software's quality, origin, functionality, security, and interoperability. Addressing these concerns requires rethinking the roles of software's principal supply-chain actors--vendor, assessor,...
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Integrating software developed by third-party organizations into a larger system raises concerns about the software's quality, origin, functionality, security, and interoperability. Addressing these concerns requires rethinking the roles of software's principal supply-chain actors--vendor, assessor, and evaluator.
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Keywords
CBSE; commercial-off-the-shelf software; COTS; component-based software engineering; independent verification and validation; software composability; software engineering; software liability; software measurement; software reliability; third-party softwar
Control Families
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